Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 30, Number 1, Jasper, Dubois County, 16 September 1887 — Page 7
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WEEKLY COURIER. 1
UflKAVA LOVf TflrUWPH. When tha mora An4U abJeb i Ceases to surfs " '.j.Tffi toes its teem seernjr as tssikras sky, CeeeaiaelMteef, fMMi ,be ,uk fmm her oet, wwu W hshe Ijuuklw sjfenaenax Throefh Mm weartsemaalohtt And she BMvea to MM eons, waie Aad,w4hwtsMrMsmk a MM n In tlM steer MniH Msbi, That VMt see wm m saaoeth m a Mm ' at ... ' !4- -J faMUC Hnl & Witt MMlld M MM aOOU I Every tUne It ttM up swMesltw upon MMii . ....t w heart wm IIM wit iarht. WalMShe ffMMM 40 SOS. 1H hf meBUUrB eiaarUiiat, Anil u tlUC aad MM. OntbebreMtof Mm mm, Wm ef BUHMeef BIMt, . . , Which told ef MM tMMrt tW H W te that Bight MMk ana ereer. Twm mt ftehernMa heekeaA for win eke feared; ror hit boat m Mm eeem she eesorty esaro. Hut m and wm m tht; Then Mr ;m efeaaoed to Wm from Mm sm to AidHMHw a m i form lytaf Mitt m Mm la MMdeeraseralac He. gomethlB atrsafe ta mm term, ter a mm IniktMMl IMF heart. Something kaowe m ttot form sansoe Mm ItteBlood to earl Throueh her taw oms MOM, ror a momeat she Mersety eeM imk tar breath, , For a momeat her faee wm m shea My m MMk, AS She (MM St MM MOM. 'Thou she mebea to ker Mi, took Mm mm from Ajad, Waring her mild la his Mt m Mat, 8ke baeteaea to ge Dowa Mm path, that wm eet i Mm enCs ree; red aide. To Mm Mnda where the eem'i suit rising Uee Cease Modjr Md ww, WitiiafMtkMUiickMrt tt Mm dry MMk, WklM Mm ImmiIhc Mm wm trftac to MMk, SIm flew e'or Mm cro4: la Um form wala lay Umt. m U doad, oa Ho latkeroot whore 'tWM loft by Mm iMt rMag tlM, Her BMbaad wm fowd. Atklttldeia m iaotMt mm droMMd oa hoc kM, And oarcrly Mrd at bta foatarM M mo Wore he llvtaf or dead; Bt the aw that bm fMa wm m RhatMy m doatk. Aad there cmm from Ms iteaaot orea a breath Aa the Jilted htaheed. TkeaMMaklrto'orkMbrMM m tero eatekl' apart, Ad bar lMrhtc head ake ylaaad oa Ma heart WOBfc a MAaaBBMMHZA hayaff aMoaat Aa ahe Mt ht heart' ttue, uaaartola aad tlckt. Her braaat ailed wttk)oy, kor eyM skeMWMh u a iHTha Whlok traMforaMd her faee. He wm gkMtty aad eoM m ke lay e Mm aead At tbe I pot aato whleh he'd hem sweet oa the trend By that terrible Mara. Bet ker heart leeyed for Jer ta Mm hfoaetef that wife, ror ake'd ftlt hl Mood throe aad the knew there wm life fta ttMt alaMM dead form With ttw etrMxMi of a (Mt, bora of kerlere. he earrted Uiat form w tee ofte iee aeore, lTreai Mm ewf-beatom Mere; Aad the dared oa Mm way aet a Moataat te root. LMt Mm heart MMt m feleMy heat ta kit hreaet To ttMhr eot Mar at heed, her berdea ahe here. Aad, Mraack kor fraaM taook M ake eatered MM rkeertdM MteeeM; Tet m etched wkea ahe'd fMMd Ma form ea Mm bed. For hit eyM were wide starter m if he were Aad kit faee rhaatly mm. WtMi Mte eeerare of lore ahe foefht lor bia Ufe, with um Tteor of tore ahe oanOMd MM strife Aad Maeaered btmb Dsatkt Tor she saw, la seed tuae, tM at east takes ye, Aad she heard wHk deUfkA treat kla Aad ahe feat hie tatet Lem had wee, m aft Mam It ked wm f ; Vf aad wee, m it w Mil owr kwm la o'er. TM we mm rreai Mats earth; i.Wher armoM atC9C mV1 9 lawT (MkHM VaMa 4M4 aWBMf TMt lore gave HMrtk. "Ve JP ffntftAtote k COMMONPLACE HERO. R OMd by a RirtU frtHat a PerilWin tar wm dyiar krd, mm! wiUt its 4ktat throe sheeted rr tMnr by feUofslwai; Um Rerik wi4 bM iM way, mad tor witk btttwr gwU ikroagb mm t4orm-rirM Mreu. mm and MTenMBki ward trana lor mm ttwry; tajajii aad tewpkoM wlm were dowm trM atdtntek pokd e oeen mappad bIhmt oaT biwn WaUrtit 0 Um mo mad tka inny. 1 ttaiwliti. BtitteM mui earn tmt Um Jt morning oUar and btiffat, Umh f ft ralawow tints on a orratal T" ttnwaai who wm out wM Tails m. LmIUI NT Aown Wward taw Art alW frMw, wira, OMtcfct Um dttaak h-VMMdMMlwi, bat WM HMpBrmeaj edwW with hif ttVHibad 1 1 .t?T'?'!a btMMf psHwasi sy MM imjbI laaaatt Mafhtgit, WaW mT 1351 Mvyw "ttmi Mtew ariiil out fT tttt tight Of hk MTikHM r"wnii "Oh. he'll ba doea Im . t it 77 away WW. o, It bohhi Twt Can't lor Waii r WhiM thaw wJ - w1AiWmdMJ4lMbxlC
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tha roof, Mttt therev it wotsld aanwi, to aadjaj ta othew. It only ratdrad aa inriwttt to tttke in tha iHwartiwi tha anuskistg, awayiag oavetrosigh, tha ilMuwralalj 111 H hawiti, tha XaUY, at faoe of um doomed aoaa, who swaAff over that d jadljr ahjaa. WtvdhlMil 6ay kiotl oat mm aft froat the etreet below. Only Um maaaUif of tha err roach ad Mm Mta on tha roof, o load aad stroHf was the wind whleh blew there, but bo aaswwad m it h had hoard lit V 11 try. 'Taj n't no diaTroaoa to mm 'Ua Sbv Bt-adr. Mar-ba a we'll both Q down; bat I racko we've aboat ekil B wm buoy faatoNinr a rope to tha aert chiwiiey aa h Hke. It wm aot a hMur roae, but It would reach be yond tha edge of Um roof, and ha e ae lea a nooao la um en oc u, wniea be plneed nrouad hie botly beneath Um arms; Umm takiHr xeoil of wire which he carriod for rmirif iwrpoMa from hit Motto, he Piiaa it to uw roua a few fast farther up, ana arauntnr upon hands aad knee, mada his way to the "HW fast. Stave," he oallod, aa eourjtfirinirly; "l m oomir to help ye. Ha. tr on till I sot a turn of Um wire around you tfood Lord! maa: don't you wrienrlo. or you're a cone one ia smto of me!" But in the same breaxN witn ine . . b . . warning Uwre was a eonruleive ofort on the part of the uetaded mau, the )Mrtinr eaves trough slipped from .his rind ftaxers, ae wm topptiag oaeK ward. IftlUHK into spaoe; the earta. mm " . . .a ky, the faoe of the man above him all blending ia one chaotic picture before his deiirin? sirht, yet he did not fall; the arm of John Harmon, who hal alipped like a flask over Uw edge. wm about kim, botdiag him up, while be adjured: 'Get a hohl, get a hold, for God's sake! If you rally your life aad mine keep your wits about you, Steve Brady. Now. then, climb un the rone. It'll bear the strain, I think, and you ret on Um roof from my shoulders. Steady; so." There was a moment of The strands of Uw straining rope wore cutting on the edge of the slates, but tbe wire which John had piled to it higher up divided the weight and ea a bleu first the one, then the other to climb to the root They stood there nantinir with exertion, Jookinr into eaek other's eyes. Then "I owe my life to you," said Brady, but I wish I didn't. I wish I'd drooped down into tbe street afore I owe! it to you." The eause of the enmity between them? The usual eause only a girl. Not even a pretty girl as the world saw her, but tbe one on whom each of these had set his heart. There something of the eoooetto ia her. ewe she had not yet learned her own mmtt, ior she had given earou ragemen t to each, or he thought so, which amounted to the same. The MttorneM of footing that, ont of eomiuoa gratitude, be ought to stand out of his rival's way, wm working in Steve Brady, but, with the words on hht lips, he becaa te waver aad sank dowa Mesons sinus. When be came to himself he wm in a strange place, but it wm still John Harmon who wm with him and who had this to say: Now, took here. Sieve Brady, don't you go to f ussin' or worritta' ! You've oeea tootc with a spell, ana ousted a biot h! vessel innardly, through straiain.' but you don't want doetorin' so much m quiet aa' pence of mind. That's why I brung yea here. This is my room aad it's in my mother s house. aad I want to say to you that I'll be square an even witk you. I won't take a step toward seeta' Dotty till you're oa your feet again. I won't try to get ahead with her through your miefortia ', aad I don t want you to feel bebokleu to me for anything. You'd a done m well by me if I'd keen in your fix. The evil spirit in Steve wm quelled by this genorees treatment. "You're n better man that I am, John Harmon," he cried out. "You're more via' of her, toe." "I don't know," answered John, "In slow an' you re quick, that's about Um difference. It just depends on which she takes to most, that's all there is of it." Another spirit moved tbe injured man before he wm conceded by John Harmon to be fairly ea hts feet again The latter came heme late from hht work one evening. "How's Brady?" he asked of Ma mother m he sat down to the supper whtoh she had kept for him. "Wants to get out, eh? He'll be there soon now, but I reckon I'll have to give him the slip to-night. She'd be disap pointed if I didn't com ' round. " "Yes," from the mother. "But seems to me ban any s ml give you bet ter worth for your money than them there roses. John." "She woaMa't think so, mother.1 Then a door went shut, aad Brady, who, wm half way down Um stairs when these worde arrested him, turned and went am asmln with hk blood on srtwm ww wwv umi evoja eon en ww a w we ism ssres'iwvn nwarn sfttfls ewNKp nnvvnl wPflnnl umMV nn&uv4el Bf Jaswwwal with him! Tins wm the man who wm more worthy of Dolly than he was. He could bear John snlaebtn; the water at the kitoban aink as be made J.u uj Ml I mill re kv vi, am im rew bWnthat a dark hVure on tbe other " - - " --J Am mtt tk.i i kta Hval. He
ht not notieThow it crept after him, follows give her a seat?" Man m corkeeninr him ia sbrht: and if there had I ner seat gets out. Oenttomaa ina the
baemaailonbtatall in Mind It wm soon ended, for they were tae dttt- JUtpA fj-t- A PBnmnrV'm Pany MM UTWrVo' eerWVV WW SWWWmJ 9
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dark farm oa owawa s stow of the war now. eeMniaw atasJthitv altar I He nmsoinliQfort then tha asHenl awMJe s?ar eeart eeaaj ta)kfl4k dJeJaMi probably had hht week's wages in has pocket; but his tret impulse to cry aat ' JHWl (eFH tlUP sfct4bas(a B(aaai fatMVsaW Why should he Mterfere What 1msinees wm it of hk if John ahoukl be asm aad robbed? Was not the lat ter stealing a march on hint, carrying roses to Dolly aad ingratiating hint elf when he had promised to keen t away. He had a momentary gUmpeo j of an uplifted arm carrying something which looked like a short eiub. Be knew instaaUy what it was. He re membered an item which be had read Um week before of aa unknown man who had been sandbagged oa the street and killed outright by a single blow. He had not set this outlaw upea Um track of John Harmon; he bad nothing to do but to hold his peace aad it might be his rival would be removed from hht path forever. It wm a wicked thought, a horrible thought. You hain't rot to do nothing. Stove Brady; only juet keep eaiet," whispered Um tempter. But another inward vowe, Sner, silli er, made itself heard. Wher'dyoube now if he'd none nothing when you hung down from that rotten eaves-trough? IXd he keep quiet an' let you drop out of hk way, or did he venture hk life to saveyour'n? This here's murder you're a aursia' ia your heart, Steve Brady. Are you roaily to do murder for any girl leastwise for a girl that don't know her own mind well enough to choose between the two of you?" All this before Uw murderous blow fell. It takes time to tell Umm thoughts of his, but they all flashed through his mind in the space of a breath. As it fell a wild, ear-splitting yell startled the assailant ami assailed alike. John Harmon wheeled in bis tracks, and the Mow, graainghk eheek, had force to knock htm down. He wm up again l the instant; up ia time to catch Steve Brady m the ruffian flung him off after the briefest struggle for Steve wm weak yet and no match for Um burly villain whose flight he had tried to intercept to catch him and bieak Um deadly force with which he wm hurled head first against Um walL That set-to had tbe effect of sending Steve back to his bed strain. His head troubled him and he raved about roses aad sand clubs and Dolly, until one day he found himself looking into Dolly's own blue, tearful eyes. "Oh, you poor followl" she cried "Oh, to think you eared so much for me! But bow brave of you to save him when you were sick and jealous and alL Yon needn't say a word, for John Harmon hM told me every thing; but Um idea of you believing that I that I could like him the beet." "Dolly," muttered poor Steve, hardly knowing if he were really awake, "do you meanyou choose mef" "You, and you only," mummed Dolly, who would have been vastly indignant had any one hinted that honest John Hanaon wm more worthy to lie glorified by that jmme heroic light with which she had invested tttovev It made no eBflkrseiea when Store confessed hk temptation to her after ward. What woman will not forgive a man who errs through loving her? Those roses were never intended for Dolly, after all. They were meant for a little lame orange girl who wm fast dying of consumption. They were the one btight spot in her joyless life, ana that wm Uw only pay night as long m she lived oa which John Harmon failed to take them to her. He k Steve's beet friend, but he hM never found another iJofly. Jtmm JmBsieT JaweVfnfcsTVn e?Pt ?PBJfcMwaJ riPnte Tr44fVIftt WeameNaW R k now fairly established that Um ommon wart, whleh k so unsightly and oftoa so proliferous on the bane's can be easily removed by small doses of sulphate of magnerfa taken internally. M. Colrat, of Lyons, hM drawn attention to thk extraordinary fact. Sereral children treated with three-grain doses of Epsom salts morning and evening were promptly eared. M. Auhurt cites the case of a pomaa whose face wm disfigured by these excrescences, aad who wm cared in a mouth by a dram and a half of magnesia token daily. Another medi cal man renorto a ease of very large warts which disappeared in a fortnight from the daily admhtietratioa of ten graiM of Um salts. Jfechcef rYsss. Am m rAlSAeAA avn Hteoreoimg weeewee. In Um exhibition reeeaUy opened at Havre there k aa interesting collection of specimens of poisonous Ashe. Sow are poieoaoas when eaten; others are merely venomous. Among the flrst are many Sparoids. a Tetrodon aad manr dupee, which are abundant near the Cape of Good Hope. In Um Japan Sea k found a very pecntter Tetrodon. which is somewmt a means of swcWe. Jt brrags on itions Bke those produced by plna, and taea deatit. Another iatorestinsr collection ia the esJdbttton k ogsuitie microbes. X T. ieei. Gentleman ton rear snMOOB of I . . . i . , , I horse car)-"lfs too bad for Umt lady 1 - stand., She Whsa m the ugh I would droM. Why doesa't eae of thoee I tdatlerm slips toto ft wna amrrwy. 1 Conductor fele)-'Mww
"Wbenkflve tise head of a roomier by Idwia I Abb eft Ho is a weW-known attorney, acitlrs in peastcs, and the brother of ea he wm ignorant enough to believe that sm'P ueJeeWPe Wenay eklPeinBw JHt e4j4ee4HeB lwV replied: "Xot if It k light weight. Let me toil you a story of my experience with a Are dollar gold piece. Mind yon. it wmi gohlptore the eoin of the realm. It had beea given me by a ettent, with a number of ether pieves and souse paper money. I don't know at what bank he procured it, but I know that he went to some bank to got the each for me, and returned with this piece aaaong ethers. The beaks pa them ewt, but they don't take them in when they know It, m 1 found out later. There k a restaurant neer my place of buainem where I hare little bueiacM transactions occasionally with the proprietor or the maa behind the counter. During the day this five dollar gold piece went orer the conn tor. The haadsome young maa with Uw white apron balanced it in his palm for a mlnate and then handed it back, saying: 'It's light weight sir, we can't pass them.' I wm staggered. I thought a Ave dollar gold wm good for soathing for its intrinsic value at least. But after Mtkfying myself that it was light weight I put it back into my pocket ami paid Um bill out of other funds. It occurred to me that 1 ought to test the paaeing qualities of Um coin at least once more, so I tried it at Um cigar store on my way up Broadwav. It wm no go. Then I sallied into Um Park National Bank. I told the cashier frankly that I understood Use eoin to be ltgkt weight, and asked him to give me its value. 'We can't do any thing with it,1 said be. But he suggested that I might be relieved at the sub-Treasury. By thk time I wm somewhat mad, and I determined to follow that flve-dellar gold piece to some kind of a resting-place if it took all day. At the Treasury there wm less encourage meat than any ptoe I had yet entered. They said they eouhi cot exchange it or redeem it or do any thing with it. Thk struck me m a strange condition of thvnge. As I went along Xassaa street ia a brown study my eye bappeaed to light on the sign of an oflke on John street. There an announcement there that old gold will be bought. I walked in and held out Um coin. 'It's short weight,' was sillsakL So I see, said the man in attendance, as he held it in his hand. What can you do with itr I asked. Melt it,' wm hk reply. He gare me $4.70 for it, the value of Uw gold. Curiosity poBsmsad me to know what would be done wHk H- He said the gold would be used for manufacturing a wi4Tewe Then it struck me that there is somewhere on Um statute books an iron-clad law that no United States eeia shall be melted un for ntanufacturing amrpeees under heavy penalties. 1 1 looked the Uw up. There it k an ; old law, very okt. but i believe sttn m force. If I am correct about it, do 1 you see Use sUuatwn? The Govern meet ksusa a gold eota. It says it shall be of such a weirht, but it must neewsarily got worn and abraded in constant circulation. Then it savs it skill not be redeemable in nay way, smaU become worthless in circulation he eause it k not redeemable, and yet shall not be eon verted into any thing else. My gob! piece bore date of 1847. I think on Um whole I prefer green backs to coin, specially short-wetgat " Jf. T. Trssaae. AUSTRALIAN SLA NO. ha Uke Lor huts are commonly called bantiesv" and a curse of the bushdktrietsof Australia k the "grog shanty," aa institution oaly too common. A hand employed oa a sheep or cattle station, when be receives hk perkdienl eheek from hk employer, will often forthwith snake tracks" for the aeareet "grog shaaty," aad remain there until the whole of hk hardly-earned pay k consumed in drink. Should he meet kindred spirits there the mouer 1 1, probaMy, be soon dkeipated by tbe proeess of "shouting." Bach mau ia tnra "shouts" that k to say, stands treat to the rest of the grthering. When the money k gone the bushman. a sadder, if not a wker man. will return to hk work oa Um station and begin to earn tbe wheiwwithai for another eh debauch. "Shouting" k a very common colonial expresshm for standing treat to strangers. A frequent invitation k to take a "kMskeved 'ua," that k a driak from a wag piat glass. In Um early days of the gold fever aueh hospitality wm wftoa practiced a a very extravagant scale. Maay stories, some of which are proluddjr apocn-phal. are told of the various to squander their gold. One k said to have ordered the whom mock of champagne in a toWalaeaiaatkittie alley. - . w n aad at eostty salttsM ae eewmei way until there wm aotone left auamaihid. M may be aotod. by taa Mtf. ew .tfama"ewaot esJetia Amv tralia; s)retTlmae of lefrsshmint k n iMtci." It may ba oady a wooden nlwnty up country, or It may rketo Use dignity of a gahraaked iron erection ten entail townehip, or. amalry. it may be a palatial buildiag la a capital cHy; lot tin mmt nmelni tfir r" Aaartre of Vow South Watot k known Ma
sValiars not flee aol-
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TssmmmmmmmmmBSBBmaBBSfBmBBsm saWtmau TWspp.sttoj eWMOOL ASO OMUnlOM,
mtr kind of A m a native of Taaunaniev aad owes haf eiegnat nieJtnaaaa to the abuadanee of anua trees in the Term aula n fimiela A native of Queensland k a ban sua 'Joey k a familiar name for any thing yemag or small, and k applied iadlflsrontiy to a aanay, or a kittoa, or a ehiM. waOe a water Joey" k a haagsr i doer of odd jobs. M (as Ytmr FIHE AMD WATER. Ptew of I have oftoa bona puaaied to for myself why water entiaguisbas ire. A great many yeopk say that it k bepietely envelop the bnraiag material to exclude oxygen, sad thus, the Are must atop. Thk seems to me aa iesuafeieat, if not entirely erroneous reason. My rasa on k this: We know that nothing will burn (i. e. unite with oxygen with Um evolution of heat and light) nnlees and until it hM i raked to a given temperature. Thus: Sodium burns at erdinarv tem peratures about AO degrees if dry the gas of ordinary kerosene at about 170 dsgroM or less, and so on. Why do we tip a piece of satek with Mtlphur aad then with phosphorus to snake matches? Because, while wood must hare quite a high tern per stnre, phosphorus uAll burn at a comparatively Ww temperature so low that the heat developed by slight friction will ignite it. The JPnasJra)4en'aw aaneniC M flsn JeVflMfc n1 efP nite Um snipe ur. but not enough to start Um wood. The sulphur in burning makes heat enough to ignite the wood. But I will ask another question: Wood ashes are white. Why k the remaining end of the JaeaSmg eaMBrta wa?nHn snasHart Mack ia color? Is it not because carbou being Mack, and the wood being composed of carbon sad compound subetaaees. which are very iaAemmaWe, the latter hewn, bat, this snerally answering our pnrpoee, do aet generate euottgh heat to oxbtiM Um former? Thk seems to me Um reason, Um carbon remainiag. ThM premising, aad showing that carbon, whleh forma the bulk of wood (aa wen aa of paper, cotton, etc,) requires to be very hot before it will unite with the oxygen, we may consider the water for a menace t. rerhape the saotsat way to make my point clear k to sake a common illestratMMt. Every one knows that if one puts a kettle of water on a heated store. he must wait a long tmae for it to besome boilinc hot, or a temperature of 212 degrees Fahr. Now, if he should put the same amount of quicksilver on bv Um side of the water, the latter would reach 213 decrees far Why k this? It k because the takes up a large amount of beat which, k there in the water, but which the thermometer does not index. Now if, after reachiar 212 decrees, he sets them off, the mroury will reach tbe temperature of the swrroanefsjg air much more rapidly. Xow, suppoM he wkhed to boll all tbe water away, to evaporate it, la that case remember lag that in paseing from water to steam tha temperature is not raised even a degree, nor any fraction of one, ooutd he aot make it all evaporate inetaaUy by raising tbe temperature a ttttle. We all know be could not; that the Are kasa degree of heat several hundred degrees higher, but Uw kettle must re nMia a long time, while the water very gradually goes off m steam. Why so? Bseauee Use water, in becoming steam, must take into itself a large amount of beat net sbowa by thermometer, and as the beet can be added only gradually the formation of stoma k slow. Mow, 1a the large amount of heat which wator eaa tohe un aad the fnnBft ftunur4 OfuaauMUTr Jnssusme'ttunaa be raked to a high temperature ia order to burn, wo have the cause of wator puttiag out a Are. Put n burn iag match Into a very small drop of water aad it k ontiafukaod bcoauoo of Um very large amount ef beat taken from the match in reducing the water to steam, which rrdeeec the temperature of Um metok to fur below SIS negroes, or at leant that far, if there k wator enough, and so the carbon aad Hs compounds forming tbe wood will no longer unite with the oxygen ef tha air. For the swum reason a hot iron tamet into wator k cooled, aad water sprinkled on toe floor cook Um air. tha heat of evaporation in the letter esse coming from Use afar itself, thus eeoliag H. Xow. If we could Aad a fluid. Tory plentiful, which reqairM asuea more beat than wator to make it ben, evidently we could put large flras out much more luadfly. M. M. ernes, hs JL jUnif gkee-JPfinicraV. Wneting flor Twa "Borr' exclaimed a "you've bore for half an heurr res, ttr." "Loekingfer acheaseto stoal tynsrr1 "Mo, sir: waiting dr; waitiag lor anethsr bey gone heme afeer two. snhv" had UMuyeu wanbajr soene"Oh! Aad Use you tUagr' "Tot, sir. I agrita to wait for Man here, ami whoa he tcun we're ianeWand beyeaedy." SL. BaamAhsk i"ea rrsss. e " - A maa went into a start the other day and called Jerk yard of knout, ia to have seme tun out at a aew ras up te saaC and preen ptly wrapped up twee pickled pigffeot whh tat romark that three fast mntto a yarn sue worm ree
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i graduates hi tm eirck thk year. Viwlile bnTbyue worm living ta htm. the dkoaseof thebadyt ton phJlosepher, the nkeaee ef the nsm4 to a Cawktian, Use dhmeae ef the sous.--Jh--Of the ties ia the Uaitod Statos 97t ate averaging IS toachors uO sV nCuuMjJ e PT ePuwT saua5 eV4Na eaiuasujuunuresaj aa opsniag ia the city of smliee were erected, aad earnest native pong rogation choice a Chinaman to be their neater. Thi library of the late Rev. Archi bald Alexander Hodge, D. D., wrofenor of Didactic aad roiemic Theology ht Prince ton Theological Seminary, mm. with Um exception of a volumes retained by the family ef the deceased, pros on tod to Lincoln Uni versity. a. t. WU$. The questioa k often asked, in regard to Um pronunciation of Latin, How do Um majority of American colleges teach it? According to the meet reliable statistics, loo of the entire number, SSS, pronounoe by Um '. method, 14 by the Knglisa aad U by the CtinenUO. Chnshow rjnWen. The following detaiticus were fouad ia Um examination of papers ef a private school in one of our large Southern cities. Sophktor One who sophies. Bvaagikt One who speaks from hk stomach. Siren Pert ammg to Syria. Stably Stables in Muse To cry m an infant. Pertaining to the female sex Donology Dropsy ia the head. JPssfea dfs'nn4w9sss4!o Tbe Canadian Methodist Ghureh covers the whole of the Dominien ef Canada. Newfoundland and the muds Islands, with a prosperous sioa in Japan. It hM 1,110 ndaktors and ministerial probationers, hers, 187,471. Value of church orty, A9,S5.04S. College property, ftoS.tSe. Sunday-schools, S,t7A; day-school scholars, 222,041; who have taken total pledge, 87, 280. rHtefm Opinitn. AMONG THE KIRaHESC There k one thing rarely emitted from female eoetume, whleh k a silver amulet hanging on the breast, ia the form of a kernel, cylinder or triangle, containing Mohammedan' writing or perhaps prayers, and givea by tiMbushand at the time of marriage. The various circumstances connected with marriage among Um KirghoM remini one strongly of patriarchal times. PaV teen k the marriageable age, aad preliminaries are commenced by the parents of Um bridegroom sending a dputation of match-makers to Um pnrenki of the bride, offering proa ante, aad among them a dish specially prepared for the occasion of Aver aad fat, which signines that they matrimony. After thk the meat k returned by preeeott aad a similar dish seat by the girfs to thoee of the bridegroom. The bride's father then summons a i of kinsmen to consider the hmHm, or gross amount to be paid for the bride. Um kmlim may consist of forty, sixty or oae hundred sheep, or from aine te f04rwr4rVVfl cMMerei Oaf tufce uwurfsn'uul which aafem the bridegroom has te give at kast two p reseats ef horses, cows, ars-arms These tillage decided, the bride's father sends to the bridegroom's mmi for wVwS sfeuViJPft Jaruwmi HMs ujlsru JuTfJurlByusa eUrwl which the bridegroom takes the ether present and goes to see the bride for the Arst time. Hot that he eaa easily change hk mind when tilings have gone thus far, for the delivery ef Mt present virtually seals the marriage con tract, aad he k so firmly betrothed that should be die before the time of marriage Um iatended wife has to go home to hk pareaki aad be tahen for the wife of Um next son. Vke versa, if during tbe period of betrothal the girl should die, her parents are bound to give instead their next daughter, or km default of one, to return the kmUm aad pay a flue. When the period of betrothal k at jm end the brhlegreom goee to the and ef hk bride, who k givea up by her parents, with a dowry ef a teat, a ObHVMI Of leNuttflseuNW 0ewttel eVRjt nMTeew ul hNfcanTUnPuWp uMWVWM e aWsaa 0uUf4b eryand a trunk of wearing apparel. On the weddiag night the muUah or arket, plaeM the bride aad brieMgroom hi the midst ef a test, puts a covered cup of water, aad begknt prayers. nBUMas navs v esJuaas uusWJt Hawel hurpartietlf ft k with thekfuU seat they engage tlMmserrM te he nteiTkd, and three" tiaMS gtvat them the itster to driak. Miinami feaseSBMaa itMS: ha bbm watar vaaaal asi astUUT uammaerw aBTByuTnani asup nayevs tbpw uwb wbwwt? with a tuft of heir tied taereae fount, the maae of the bride's horse or sum of her ribbonOj others ettu tanatflA a paper ef vhrHtea ptmyam. The happy completion of a marriage hi festowed among uUlN& eKwiWpjuuJuys UIJ' eftstuurJweJ eWBaa garnet, and thea the newly ntarrted deport to the bridegroom'i and, wttk the camek eerryhas: the trgumsaa, mnt uewi JOJnCM shAut (uwaM pVeufcule a afcj(u( sivmtoeeehof hk daugtuswaea her Bmss ubS JnunnMmnuuuBa Anunv. & euBWuaj fg amBPBnmhrmj uwemp"
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